Adult female (posterior view)

Adult female (posterior view):
mature female human being.Hair: hair on the scalp of a human being.Shoulder: joint connecting the arm to the trunk.Back: rear part of the body, between the kidneys and the nape
of the neck.Elbow: joint connecting the upper arm and the forearm.Forearm: part of the upper limb between the elbow and the wrist.Hand: part of the end of a human arm, composed of five fingers
and used for toucning and holding.Buttock: each of two fleshy parts at the base of the back.Thigh: upper part of the lower limb of humans; it contains the
femur.Ankle: joint connecting the leg to the foot.Heel: back part of the foot.Calf: muscular surface at the back of the leg, below the knee.Posterior rugae: crease between the two buttocks.Lumbar region or loin: region of the lower back, in the area
of the kidneys.Wrist: joint connecting the forearm and the hand.Hip: part of the side of the body between the waist and the thigh.Shoulder blade: one of two flat triangular bones in the upper
back.

Photo :

EN : Goat

FR : Chèvre

ES : Cabra

Domestic goats are one of the oldest domesticated
species. For thousands of years, goats have been used for their milk,
meat, hair, and skins all over the world. Most goats naturally have
two horns, of various shapes and sizes depending on the breed. While
horns are a predominantly male feature, some breeds of goats have horned
females. Polled (hornless goats) are not uncommon and there have been
incidents of polycerate goats (having as many as eight horns), although
this is a genetic rarity thought to be inherited. Their horns are made
of living bone surrounded by keratin and other proteins and are used
for defense, dominance, and territoriality.

Goats are ruminants. They have a four-chambered
stomach consisting of the rumen, the reticulum, the omasum, and the
abomasum. Goats have horizontal slit-shaped pupils, an adaptation which
increases peripheral depth perception. Because goats' irises are usually
pale, the pupils are much more visible than in animals with horizontal
pupils but very dark irises, such as sheep, cattle
and most horses.

Both male and female goats have beards,
and many types of goats may have wattles, one dangling from each side
of the neck. Some breeds of sheep and goats appear superficially similar,
but goat tails are short and point up, whereas sheep tails hang down
and are usually longer, though some are short, and some long ones are
docked.